I Am a Promise: The Children of Stanton Elementary School
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • A 1993 Documentary Behaviours 4-10 Years Old
  • Stanton Elementary
I Am a Promise: The Children of Stanton Elementary School
Director: Susan Raymond
Manufacturer: New Video Group
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

GeneralGeneral | Documentary | Genres | DVD | Video
DocuramaDocurama | Series & Studios | Documentary | Genres | DVD | Video
GeneralGeneral | African American Cinema | Genres | DVD | Video
( I )( I ) | Titles | Features | DVD | Video
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ASIN: B000742G2O
Release Date: 2005-02-22

Description

Winner of the Academy Award® for Best Documentary and widely celebrated on the HBO hit series America Undercover, I AM A PROMISE has been applauded by The New York Times as a "strong documentary… unsparing yet tender." Directed by the innovative, award-winning team of Alan and Susan Raymond (An American Family), I AM A PROMISE paints an unflinching verité portrait of the children of Stanton Elementary School in North Philadelphia, an inner-city neighborhood where 90% of the students live below the poverty line. As seen through the viewpoint of devoted principal Deanna Burney, the film shows Stanton as grossly underfunded, understaffed, and filled with children struggling to overcome their difficulties. For these at-risk kids, however, the hope for their future survives only in the success of their education. Astoundingly relevant today, I AM A PROMISE imparts a poignantly captivating series of vignettes concerning children growing up outside the American dream, echoing current "hot-button" issues in our country's ongoing political discussion. DVD Features: Commentary Featuring the Filmmaker and Principal Deanna Burney; Filmmaker Biographies; Interactive Menus; Scene Selection

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars A 1993 Documentary Behaviours 4-10 Years Old.......2006-01-25

1/25/06 I found the documentary very poignant..the fact that 13 years ago(documentary is 1993) a group of 4-10 year old African American children were demanding "pampering" from their principle..: they were suppose to over ride their classroom teachers to tattle when they "spit,kicked or punched each other" & that they were a melting pot of all types of abilities as well as problems. ..The Stanton Elementary School was fortunate to have parents who came to the school to demand their children "not play the untrue stereotype of "the stupid African American".When you see the documentary, it becomes bewildering as to why these kids' neighborhoods did not evolve for the better over the years.Perhaps the tranquilizers they were being given as an excuse when they "hyped", transits to "street drugs" when they involved themselves in the teen years "with the streets".

4 out of 5 stars Stanton Elementary.......2005-07-26

This documentary looks at a public elementary school in a low-income neighborhood of Philadelphia. Either it was made in the late 1980s or momma is giving their sons high-top fades long after it went out of fashion. Please note that so many of the children in this documentary are adorable with their big eyes, small statures, and chubby cheeks.

This documentary effectively, though subtly, shows that low-income schools have to address barriers of which Middle American/suburban schools never have to dream. So much of the staff had to spend their time motivating learners when class-privileged students take their specialness as a given. So much time is addressed on behavioral problems that it sucks away time from learning. These children have to grow up quickly: they speak of drugs and racism firsthand at a time when privileged children are drawing pictures of dragons and begging for more toys than they need.

I now understand why principal applicants in my large city must take rigorous examinations before they are hired. The principal valiantly wore so many hats: parent figure, disciplinarian, group leader, economizer, etc. I must admit that I was shocked to see a class-privileged, Caucasian I woman care so much about poor, black kids. Seeing her cry near the end truly affected me. Still, she spoke about "inequity" and I wish that she would have stopped dancing around the issue of racism. Further, there may have been too much focus upon her and not enough focus on the teachers, some of whom seemed very interesting.

This book reminded me of the academic text "Troubled Boys, Promising Girls." Here, all the boys are shown as having problems, while one girl is shown as being parentless, but still gifted. Does this documentary intend to suggest that no girls are disobedient and no boys are talented? Furthermore, many males are shown and only this one female student is shown. This gender imbalance is troubling given that the elementary school is almost certainly equally gendered.

The student population here was far more monoracial than the faculty. If the faculty is half white and half black (purposely written in that order), then I don't understand why teachers and the principal didn't talk about having to work to present a united front or educate as a biracial staff.

There's a lot of off-key children's singing here; parents love that type of stuff, but it got the fastforward button from me. I think the all-male class with its black male teacher worked out well, but something tells me it may violated the 14th and 15th Amendments of the United States Constitution.

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